Planet: Chapter 2 - part 2
When I
mentioned I didn’t have any soap, the shaved-head guy told me I could use
whatever was in there.
“Well,
there’s only the one body wash, but I use it for everything,” he said with a
shrug. Then, he added, “Take your time and clean up thoroughly; it’ll help.”
The bathtub was small and blue, like the one in the apartment I used to share
with my parents.
The liquid
soap made tons of bubbles—it was fun. This was nice. With a bar of soap, you
hardly get any bubbles at all. But as soon as I put it in my hair, they
disappeared. I laughed, “Haha,” amused by the way they foamed and faded,
playing with them until I forgot the pain and put weight on my foot. “Yowch!” I
yelped, and from outside, I heard him call, “What happened in there?”
It’s nice
being alone in the bath. Nobody waiting, nobody telling me to hurry, just
taking my time. After I was all warmed up, I decided I was done and stepped
out. My clothes were gone. With nothing to wear, I crawled out of the bathroom
on my knees. That’s when the shaved-head guy showed up.
“I left a
towel for you. Why didn’t you dry off?”
“A towel?”
He opened
the bathroom door and, shaking his head, pointed to where he’d left a towel
with a change of clothes in plain sight. He handed me the towel.
“Thank
you.”
I dried off
in the hallway and put on the clothes he’d brought for me. They smelled like
someone else, someone unfamiliar, and it made me feel a bit restless.
The warm
bath felt nice. I was hungry, but more than that, I just felt really sleepy.
“Why don’t
you stay the night?” he suggested. “The rain’s pretty bad, and it’s already
dark.”
Sometimes,
people let me stay over. Like during typhoons. Kind people are out there. It’s
good that there are nice people around.
“Thank
you.”
I thanked
him and curled up in the corner of the room.
“Um, mind
if I say something?”
He was
looking at me.
“I think
you should dry your hair.”
“Okay.”
“I mean,
it’d be best if you did.”
“I’m
sleepy.”
I closed my
eyes, but then a warm blast made my head feel cozy. I opened my eyes to see him
drying my hair with a hairdryer.
“Sorry, I
just can’t stand wet hair, personally.”
“Oh.”
Wet hair
doesn’t bother me, but as it started drying, I could feel how damp it was
before.
“Just stay
lying down. Could you turn the other way?”
I rolled
over, and the warm air blew over me again, cozy and comforting. It’s nice to
have my hair dry while lying here. I don’t have to do anything. His fingers
brushing through my hair reminded me of my mom’s gentle touch. This is nice.
The hum of
the hairdryer stopped, and I watched as he neatly wrapped its cord around it.
On his arm, there was a small tattoo—a circle, a triangle, and… a crescent
moon. …An image of rain, the sea, and space.
“Are you
the guy with the space tattoo?” I asked.
He looked
at me and said, “Ah, yeah,” then let out a big, surprised, “What?” Startled, I
jolted.
“You only
just noticed?” His voice sounded slightly fast, almost irritated.
“Yes.”
“Well, I guess
that’s fine…”
I usually
remember things if I see them often, but it’s hard to remember people I don’t
see much. It’s always like that.
My stomach
growled. Ah, now that I’m awake, I’m aware of how hungry I am.
“You’re
hungry?”
“Yes.”
“Want
something to eat? I’ve only got cup noodles, though.”
“I don’t
have any money.”
“Don’t
worry about it. It’s just cup noodles.”
Would he
really give them to me for free? Just like those people who hand out food, he’s
kind. A kind, nice person.
“Thank you
very much.”
The space
tattoo guy made me a cup of ramen. I was starving, and it tasted so good I
drank all the broth. I was licking the inside of the empty cup when he asked,
“Want this, too?” and handed me some bread. I was over the moon.
With my
stomach full, I started feeling sleepy again. My hands and feet ached with a
throbbing pain, but it wasn’t like the miserable feeling I’d had outside. Here,
it’s dry and warm.
As I lay
down, he handed me a sleeping bag. “You can use this.” Sometimes, when I sleep
near the Center, I see people who have sleeping bags. I used to have one too,
but I lost it somewhere. Sleeping in a bag is good. Really good. I crawled into
the warmth, and my eyes were already closing.
“I still
have a few things to do tonight, so I’ll be in the other room…”
I could
hear the space tattoo guy talking. I wondered what he was saying, but before I
could even think about it, sleep took over, and everything went dark.
◇:-:◆:-:◇
I open my eyes just a little. It’s dim. A sort
of dusky blue, like it's mixed with ash. Maybe it’s still a bit before morning.
The rain is loud, whooshing down outside. And then suddenly, a deep thud-thud-thud,
like something scary. The kind of rain that blows in, even under the eaves.
It’s an awful sound.
This sleeping bag is warm. Really nice. I’d
like one of these. I wonder if they’re expensive. Oh… I need to pee. Ugh. What
a hassle. I don’t want to move. My foot hurt. Moving makes it sting. The pain
doesn’t go away, even when I sleep. I wonder if there’s an empty plastic bottle
somewhere. If I had one, I wouldn’t need to get up.
I hold it as long as I can, but when it feels
like I might wet myself, I crawl to the toilet on my knees. Moving on my knees
doesn’t hurt as much. Having a toilet in the room is really convenient. Neither
the shelters nor the company dorm had toilets in the rooms. Well, one time
there was—a dorm room with a toilet. But the lever wouldn’t flush, and when I
told the office person, they yelled, “Don’t use it!” They didn’t say I had to
pay for the damage, but it must’ve been my fault. I felt bad about it.
When I try to stand on one foot, I wobble, so I
reluctantly sit down. This time, my butt doesn’t feel sticky. I wonder if the
toilet seat’s clean. Thank goodness. When I leave the bathroom, I notice
something next to the bed. A long shadow, kind of tall, moving with a slight
sway like a ghost. It scares me.
“Good morning,” the shadow says.
“Good… morning.”
Greeting is important, so I do it properly.
There’s a little click, and suddenly the light flicks on, making my eyes sting
and blur. The shadow is the shaved-head guy. He yawns, stretching his mouth
wide with a “Fwaah.” Then he walks over to the small kitchen, only half a
tatami mat wide, and crouches down, opening the little fridge and looking
inside. He twists his head back toward me and says, “For breakfast…”
“Is bread okay?”
“Yes.”
The shaved-head guy grabs a loaf from the
fridge and pops it into the toaster. He hums a tune, sounding happy. Then he
drags the little table from the head of the bed to the center of the room.
The toaster chimes, filling the room with the
smell of freshly toasted bread. On a big plate, two slices of yellow-golden
toast, steaming hot. The shaved-head guy says, “This is all there is,” and I
wonder if I’m allowed to eat it. But then…
“I don’t have any money.”
“Don’t worry about that—it’s just bread.”
Is he giving me this bread? He’s really nice.
The toast is hot, and when I bite down, it makes a crisp sound. Crispy bits
melt into a gentle sweetness with each bite. So good. Freshly toasted bread is
amazing.
The shaved-head guy places two glasses on the
table. They’re filled with something white, like milk. “Here you go,” he says,
and since my throat feels dry, I gulp it down. Yep, it’s milk. I like milk, so
I’m happy. The dorm cafeteria rarely had milk. And now… oh, it’s gone. I drank
it all.
The shaved-head guy goes back to the fridge and
brings over the milk carton. “If you’re thirsty, just help yourself,” he says,
setting it on the table. It’s self-serve. So I pour myself another glass.
“Would you like another slice of bread?”
Can I have more? I’d love more.
“Yes.”
He goes to the toaster. I’m halfway through my
second slice when he comes back and says, "What! Did you eat all the toast
that was ready? So you don't wait for people, huh? Ah, whatever.”
The shaved-head guy sits across from me and
sips his milk. The rain keeps going, falling with a steady swoosh outside. And
suddenly, I think of breakfast with my dad. The memory just pops into my mind.
The shaved-head guy seems to be watching me,
his mouth moving.
“How’s your injured foot?”
“It still hurts.”
I move it from time to time, wondering if it
might be better, but the pain is always there. The shaved-head guy looks at his
phone for a while, head down, before finally looking back up.
“A taxi would be easiest to get back, huh? I
wonder how much that’d cost. But… don’t you not have any money?”
If I go back to the dorm, maybe the cops will
show up. Will they get mad and say those bones belonged to my dad? Even though
they aren’t him. Cops always shout, and I hate that. I don’t want to get
scolded. Working at Tani Construction is fine, but with the cops involved,
maybe I should just quit and find another job. But with my leg like this, I
can’t work. If I can’t work, no one will hire me. Being useless is no good.
What am I gonna do?
“I’m not going back to the dorm.”
“Not going back? So, what will you do?”
The toaster dings. The shaved-head guy takes
out the bread, exclaiming, “Ow, ow!” as he holds it and bites the edge like a
hungry dog.
“I don’t want to go back, so I won’t.”
The shaved-head guy just says, “Hmm,” tearing
another bite of his bread.
“I’ll work somewhere else.”
If I go to the Center, there’s a recruiter’s
car. But it’s raining and late, so it won’t work out today.
“Your foot hurts, right? Looks like you can
barely stand. Can you really work?”
When I broke my foot before, it hurt so bad I
couldn’t walk for a long time. I stayed in the dorm room until it healed, just
watching TV all day. I racked up a mountain of debt with room and board fees,
but I was okay with it. What am I supposed to do? I don’t want to go back to
the dorm. If the cops come, they’ll start saying unpleasant things. I really
hate it… ugh, my head feels like it’s getting all tight and clogged up, all
those things they’ll say piling up till I can’t make sense of anything…
“Would you like to stay here for a bit?”
That’s what it sounded like.
“If you’re okay with the sleeping bag, you can
keep using it.”
Stay here? This isn’t a dorm—it’s the shaved-head
guy’s house. If it’s not outside, places to sleep like dorms or shelters
usually cost money.
“I’ll pay. For food and a bed.”
“Uh… didn’t you say you’re out of money?”
“I’ll work and pay once the pain’s gone.”
“… Well, it’s not really a big deal.”
I feel relieved. “Not a big deal” means it’s
okay even if I don’t get it all right. I don’t have to think too hard about it.
This guy really is a good person.
“You’re very kind.”
“It’s not kindness, really, it’s just… it feels
like fate that we happened to meet there.”
The shaved-head guy pours milk into a glass
with a splash, a little wave of it spilling out and forming a white circle on
the table.
“I don’t really cook or anything, so it’ll
mostly be cup ramen and convenience store meals.”
Cup ramen and convenience store meals are fine.
They’re better than the dorm food.
“The area behind that curtain over there is my
studio,” he says, pointing at a rust-colored curtain. Studio—that word sounds
familiar. What was it again?
“When I’m working in there, I usually have
music on, so I might not hear if you call me. Just don’t worry about it. You’re
free to watch TV as much as you want—it doesn’t bother me unless it’s
blasting.”
Am I not supposed to go behind the curtain? I
feel like I should say something back, so I just go with, “Alright.” The shaved-head
guy turns to look at me.
“Do you want to go to the hospital for your
foot?”
“I don’t know.”
The shaved-head guy gives me a startled look,
blinking. When I got hurt before, my dad or someone from the company would take
me to the hospital. Now that they’re gone, I don’t know how to get there
myself. It hurts when I walk on it, but it doesn’t hurt if I don’t walk. It’ll
probably heal eventually. I don’t really need to go to the hospital, right?
“I’m not going to the hospital.”
The shaved-head guy pauses, then stands up,
saying, “Well, that’s up to you to decide.”
“I’m gonna get to work now, so just make
yourself at home. Oh, do you play games or go online?”
“No.”
“Hm,” he nods, then slips behind the rust-colored
curtain. Now I’m alone. I’m here by myself. It’s okay for me to be here. Once I
can work, I’ll pay back what I owe for room and board, all of it. That’s what a
decent person should do. My dad always said honesty was best.
The glass the shaved-head guy was drinking from
is still on the table, empty. I rub a finger over the circle of milk on the
table, and it leaves a white line, like thinned-out paint.
There’s absolutely nothing to do. Would it be
too loud if I turned on the TV? The room’s only divided by a curtain, and I
don’t have my own earphones either. I lie down on top of the sleeping bag,
rolling over onto my side. I’m not really sleepy, but I close my eyes anyway.
Let’s think of something fun. The sky, dark and vast. I really wish I could go
to my own star soon. Maybe if I get there, my leg will heal right away. It
seems like it would… And then…
“Hey… hey, sir.”
I woke up to my body being gently shaken. Who’s
looking at me? Oh, it’s the shaved-head guy. He’s younger than me… oh right,
the shaved-headed guy’s here.
“I got us some lunch. Want some?”
There’s a bento and a cup of tea on the table.
I crawl over on my knees, peering down at the bento from above, and I spot
karaage (fried chicken)—yes! I’m glad.
I sit across from the shaved-head guy, and we
start eating our bento meals together.
“Does it bother you if you’re woken up while
you’re sleeping?” he asks.
His mouth keeps moving, either talking or
eating, nonstop.
“If it does, just let me know. I can buy food
and leave it here, and you can eat whenever.”
I don’t mind being woken up. Dad used to wake
me up every morning. Come to think of it, even though he called it lunch, I’m
not really that hungry. Usually, I’d be starving by lunch, but maybe that’s
because I’ve just been lying around doing nothing. The food in the shaved-head
guy’s bento quickly disappears—he eats fast. There were a few quick eaters back
at the dorm, and he’s just as fast as them.
Something falls from the shaved-head guy. It
floats lightly over to me—a thin, blackish strand, coiled a little like a
butterfly’s tongue. When I pinch it between my fingers to get a closer look, it
crumbles into a powdery dust. “Just throw that away, it’s wood shavings,” the shaved-head
guy says.
Wood shavings this tiny… I wonder how they get
made. I’m playing with it between my fingers, and some of the dust falls into
my tea, forming pale specks on the surface. I try to fish it out with my
finger, but I can’t, so I just drink it as is—if it’s just wood, it should be
fine.
I finish my bento, close the lid, and say, “It
was delicious. Thank you,” bowing my head in thanks to this kind person.
“Oh, right. I picked up some bandages or
something while I was out, so here you go.”
The shaved-head guy sets a box on the table.
Bandages are for covering painful spots. After the doctor told me my bone had
healed last time, my leg still hurt for a while, and he gave me some bandages.
They had a sharp, minty smell that hit my nose, and there was an old man in the
dorm who smelled the same, so that’s where the smell must’ve come from. It was
annoying; the smell clung to me like a swarm of flies the whole time I wore it.
“You said you’re not going to the hospital, but
I figured I’d get this because I was a little worried.”
Oh, right. My leg hurts. Maybe if I put this
on, it’ll feel better.
“How do I use it?”
“You just put it directly on where it hurts.”
The shaved-head guy opens the box, takes out a
white, thin sheet that looks kind of like a flat piece of hanpen (soft fish
cake). It’s a bit different from what I saw before, but that same sharp smell
hits me.
“Alright, I’ll put it on for you, so stick out
your leg.”
I put both legs out from under the table like
he said.
“Uh… it’s just one leg that hurts, right? Which
one was it… oh, the swollen one here, huh?”
The shaved-head guy presses the bandage onto my
leg, and the coolness of it makes me shiver. “Ah! Ah! It’s freezing!” I shout,
twitching my leg from the shock. It hurts.
“Heh,” the shaved-head guy chuckles, but
quickly apologizes, saying, “Oh, sorry.”
“Hope it helps,” he adds, putting away the
empty bento and leaving a big bottle of tea on the table with, “Just make
yourself at home.” Then, he slips back behind the rust-colored curtain.
The rain outside is getting louder. There’s
nothing to do. …My leg, the one with the bandage, feels cold. It’s unpleasant,
like wearing wet, heavy clothes. Do I have to keep it on? Would he get mad if I
took it off? I don’t want him to get mad.
Am I not supposed to talk to him when he’s
behind the curtain? But this cold feeling on my leg… it’s getting to me, and I
can’t take it anymore. On all fours, I crawl over to the rust-colored curtain.
Careful not to make a sound, I lift it, just a little.
My eyes go wide. The room is about six tatami
mats in size, brighter than where I was. The lights are on full blast. A guy
with a shaved head is sitting at a big desk attached to the wall. His back is
perfectly round. Occasionally, his arms move a bit, making a soft, scraping
sound.
“Um…” I try.
No response. I try a bit louder, “Um…” but
still nothing. Is he ignoring me, or does he really not hear me?
Next to the curtain on the wall is a low shelf
about as high as I am on all fours. On top of it are several framed pictures
standing up. The picture in the very front is of outer space. My head fills
with a warm glow of happiness. I wanted to see this picture again. Yes! I
slowly step inside. The real picture is even better than the one in my memory.
I love it.
A black space, dotted with white. A huge number
of white stars fill it. I wonder which one is my star. When I move closer to
the picture, it feels like I’m going to be pulled right into the blackness.
This has to be the entrance to space, right? Maybe I can go through. I wonder
what my mom and dad are doing on our star. Maybe they’re having lunch together.
“Whoa!”
At the sudden loud voice, my chest goes
thumping, like it’s about to leap out. It feels scary, like I’ve messed up big
time. The guy with the shaved head has turned in his chair and is holding his
chest, saying, “Phew.”
“You startled me. I didn’t know anyone was
here.”
The guy took out something like white earbuds
and asked, “Did you need something?”
Oh, right—what was it again? Why did I come
here? I look to the side and see the picture I was just looking at—the picture
of outer space.
“This picture… it’s nice.”
The guy laughs, “Haha. You really like that
one, huh?”
“Yes.”
“Want to see the woodblock?”
“The… woodblock?”
“Yeah.”
The guy pulls a cardboard box from a big shelf
behind his desk. He takes something out of it and shows it to me. It’s a slice
of wood.
One side of the wood is pitch-black, almost
like it’s burned, and there’s a picture on it. It’s similar to the picture of
space. Is it the same one? The space in the picture looks like it could suck me
in, but this one doesn’t. It looks the same, but it’s different. What is the
difference? The wooden one feels more open and cramped, more and more black, so
black… and deep. Yeah, deep, with a suffocating feeling.
Space inside the wood. When I touched it, my
fingertip felt scratchy, and I quickly pulled my hand back. There’s something
there. Behind it, there’s something. It’s definitely there. The guy traces the
place I touched with his finger.
“We ink this type of woodblock and use it to
print.”
I lean closer, wanting to get deeper into this
universe. Ah, I think I could slip right in. I’d become as tiny as a grain of
rice, then… something taps me on the forehead. Tap, tap.
The guy chuckles, and that deep place I was
about to enter fades away. The guy’s looking at me.
“What are you doing?”
I’m not doing anything weird, but the guy’s
voice sounds amused.
“This is space.”
“If that’s what you think, then that’s fine.”
“I think I can go in.”
The guy says, “Hmm.”
“That’s my universe, though. Even if you knock
on it with your head, the door for you won’t open.”
Oh, now I get it. Just now, I understood. This
space is where his star is. So, my star isn’t here. They aren’t the same.
“I see.”
I move my face away from the wood. Then, will
he one day return to his star, too? There must be lots of people like that,
staying silent about it so they can go back when the time comes.
“Are you… waiting for someone to come for you?”
As soon as I ask, a deep fear comes over me.
Mom told me not to talk about this with anyone. But… I didn’t say anything
about “returning to my star,” so maybe it’s fine? Maybe I’m safe.
"Does 'waiting for someone to come get
you'… mean dying?" The shaved-headed guy tilts his head.
Waiting for someone to come isn’t death. That
place isn’t death.
“No.”
“It’s not? I don’t really get what you mean.”
The guy puts his universe back in the cardboard
box and places it on the shelf. It’s out of sight now, but the universe is
still there—the universe framed in the picture. But the universe in the wood
felt so packed and dense that it made the one in the picture look flat. Yeah, I
think… I like the universe in the wood better.
◇:-:◆:-:◇
In the
mornings, I have bread, at lunch I boil water for instant noodles, and at
night, I eat a bento. The shaved-headed guy leaves in the morning and comes
back at night with a bento.
While
watching the picture of his universe from behind the rust-colored curtain, I
must’ve fallen asleep. The shaved-headed guy woke me up saying, “Dinner’s
ready.”
Tonight’s
bento has a red and yellow “discount” sticker on it. I like those. When I was
little, my dad used to peel off the stickers for me, and I’d stick them by the
TV. That was fun. The shaved-headed guy brings a bento back at night, so he’s
kind of like my dad.
“You’re
like my dad.”
“Me?” he
asks.
“Yes.”
“Do I even
look like him?”
His face…
I’m not really sure, but he probably doesn’t look like Dad.
“No.”
“So, is it
the atmosphere?”
It’s not
just the shaved-headed guy—lots of people talk about ‘atmosphere.’ I don’t
really understand it. It’s not the name of a thing, but everyone uses it. When
I don’t know what a word means, I just say “yes” to be safe. Some people get
mad if I ask. “Didn’t I tell you before?” That scares me, so I’m careful.
“Yes. You
bring back bento at night.”
“Ah, I
see,” he says, eating his hamburger. I already ate the hamburger from my bento.
It was good.
“What’s
your dad like?”
The
shaved-headed guy looks at me. My dad… What’s he like?
“He’s
kind.”
“Must be
nice,” he says, popping some tamagoyaki into his mouth. “I don’t think I ever
thought my own dad was kind.”
“Really?
That’s sad.”
“Sad?” he
repeats.
“People who
aren’t kind are sad. It’s better if they’re kind.”
He mutters
in a low voice, not exactly mad but sort of mumbling, “He wasn’t exactly angry
at me, but… being so indifferent, without even trying to hide it, was tough. I
haven’t seen him in a long time. Feels like he’s dead to me.”
Dead. That
word stood out so clearly. A hazy memory of the face of an uncle who died
on-site comes to mind—the screams, the loud ‘thud’ sound. Then, that loud
crashing and grinding suddenly stopped, along with the machine engine going
quiet, shrinking down, and then silence. Inside, I felt a weird, creeping
chill. Nobody spoke. After that short silence, the noise picked up again,
louder than before. “He’s dead,” “It’s no use,” people were saying. The
ambulance sirens whined in my ears. They carried the bloodied, unmoving uncle
on a stretcher. Everyone watching kept saying, “He’s dead, he’s dead.” So, I
guess he really was dead. Humans die when they fall from high places, just like
dropping a cup. If you drop a cup and it smashes, that’s it. It can’t be used
anymore; you throw it away.
There are
so many things I don’t remember clearly, but this one stayed vivid in my head.
I wish I could forget things like that.
“Death is
sad.”
“Yeah, most
people feel that way,” he says, putting his empty bento into a plastic bag and
setting it down.
“There’s
something detached about you and the world around you,” he says, seeming like
he’s talking about me, though it sounds complicated. I live because I’m alive.
I eat when I’m hungry. I don’t want to die. Death must hurt. There would be
blood.
“You don’t
seem to have attachments, either.”
Not having
attachments is supposed to be good. It makes work go faster. So it’s fine to
not have them.
“Sometimes
I wonder if the world I see and the world you see are even the same.”
The world I
see? The world is the stuff around me. Everyone has eyes, so it should be the
same, right?
In front of
me, there’s a cup. It’s filled with tea I poured from a big bottle. I pick it
up and move it closer to the shaved-headed guy.
“It’s a
cup.”
“Well, yes,
it is.”
“Can you
see the cup?”
“Yeah, I
guess.”
“I can see
the cup, too.”
“It’s not
that simple or concrete. More like… I guess you’d call it perspective?
Atmosphere? Which makes it even vaguer and harder to grasp.” The shaved-headed
guy hums thoughtfully, crossing his arms.
“So, in the
end, maybe it comes down to whether things you can see and touch are the only
real truths,” he says.
Visible
things and invisible things… Is it like people who can see ghosts? Doesn’t
really matter to me.
“Shaved-head
guy is kind like my dad.”
“…‘Shaved-head
guy’? You mean me?”
“Yes.”
He sighs.
“Yeah, I am shaved, but being called ‘shaved-head guy’ is a bit much,” his
voice trails off. “Most people call me Kan or Kan-san, using my first name.
That’d be better.”
“Kan-san?”
“Yes. My first
name is pronounced ‘Kan-u’ and is written with the characters for ‘sweet rain.’
When people first meet me, they often assume I’m named after the ‘Kan’ in Romance
of the Three Kingdoms’s Guan Yu, unless I show them my business card.”
Sweet rain.
Like a candy. It’s a nice, tasty-sounding name. I like it.
“Kan-san.”
“Yes.”
The
shaved-head guy is now Kan-san. I remember an old man who went by that name
once, too.
“What’s
your name?”
“Mura.”
“…Mura-san,
then. Mura-san, you really like karaage, don’t you?”
“Yes.”
“You always
eat the karaage first from your bento. I try to get it when I can, but it’s
popular, so there isn’t always any left.”
He tosses
the empty bento into the trash and says, “I’ll be in the other room. If you
need anything, just call,” before going behind the rust-colored curtain.
Now I’m
alone. There’s nothing else to do, so I turn on the TV. Kan-san said I don’t
need headphones. He says the TV doesn’t bother him. I’d thought that was
unusual, but now I realize I don’t mind the noise, either.
When I lie
down on the sleeping bag, my sore leg throbs. I forgot about the pain and moved
it too fast. I wonder if it’s getting better? It still hurts when I stand, so
I’ve been here for days. The money… well, Kan-san’s probably handling that,
like the admin person back at the dorm. Once my leg stops hurting, I’ll go
work. I’ll pay him back properly. My dad said it’s okay to borrow money as long
as you repay it.
Outside,
people might steal from you while you sleep or hit you, but here, I’m safe. I
can stay inside, watch TV, eat meals. My body doesn’t get itchy, and I can take
a proper bath. Kan-san is kind. He’s kind, just like my dad. It’s nice here.
Really nice.
If I had a
cigarette, it’d be perfect. You need money to buy cigarettes. I don’t have
money because I’m not working. I wonder if Kan-san smokes. I’ve never seen him
smoke. Some people at work don’t smoke or drink, either.
I only
drank once. When I became an adult, my dad gave me a cigarette and a cup with
alcohol to celebrate. The alcohol smelled like thinner, made me feel sick, and
I threw up. Dad said, “I can’t drink, either. Guess it’s genetic.” My dad
always smoked, though. His clothes had a nice tobacco smell.
Man, I
really want a cigarette. I don’t have any. I’d need money to buy some. I wonder
if I could borrow money from Kan-san. Even if I did, could I make it to the
convenience store to buy them? Can I walk that far? Where is the convenience
store, anyway? I think this place was near a park. I’ll figure it out once I’m
walking.
Lying on my
stomach, I look under Kan-san’s bed to see if there are any half-smoked ones
left behind. I stretch my hand out and feel something rustling. It’s something
blackish. I pull it out. It’s a small, square plastic bag, no bigger than my
palm. It’s thin. Gum, maybe? The bag’s not opened, so maybe it’s still good to
eat. I place it on the table.
Dust covers
my arm, so I brush it off. I wonder if Kan-san has a cigarette. Even if it’s
damp, I’d take it. Should I ask him? I didn’t need one until now, so why am I
suddenly craving it so badly? Maybe it’s just because I keep thinking about
it—cigarettes, cigarettes.
On all
fours, I crawl over and lift the rust-colored curtain. A sharp scent hits my
nose... is that semen? Kan-san is sitting in a chair, moving his hand between
his legs. Oh, he’s rubbing himself.
His back
shifts slightly, then freezes. He turns his head towards me, and with a loud
“Whoa!” he hunches forward. I flinch at his shout, and he hurriedly apologizes,
tucking his now-standing penis back into his pants.
“Do you
have a cigarette?”
“A…
cigarette?”
“An
unfinished one would be fine.”
“I’ll… I’ll
look. If I find one, I’ll bring it to you.”
I go back
to the TV. Kan-san was rubbing himself. I do that sometimes too. Dad once told
me, “If you’re going to do that, only do it in the bathroom or under the
covers. It’s not something you show to others.” The dorm toilets were always
stinky and filthy, so I’d always do it in bed. But here, the bathroom’s clean,
so I use it instead. I wonder why Kan-san doesn’t use the bathroom or his bed
for it.
There’s a
soft rustle, and Kan-san comes out from behind the rust-colored curtain.
“About
earlier… sorry about that.”
He’s
apologizing again. I wonder why. I’m not mad, but I reply with a “Yes.”
“…I think I
mentioned, just as a rule, to call out before you go over there.”
Call out?
Did he tell me that?
“Oh, okay.”
Kan-san’s
face is redder than usual. Is he angry? Or maybe he’s embarrassed about being
seen?
“I only saw
a little bit,” I say.
Kan-san’s
face flushes even deeper, and he looks down, trembling slightly as he grabs the
gum packet from the table and stuffs it into his pocket. His ears are a bright,
fiery red.
“It’s best
to rub yourself either in the bathroom or under the covers.”
With a
small “yes,” he replies, then slips back behind the rust-colored curtain.
Lol that was an oddly cute interaction? Mura doesn’t understand that it’s embarrassing to be caught like that? And I didn’t know Kan could get so embarrassed and shy. Mura should really get that leg checked out though.
ReplyDeleteI don’t think that was a gum packet, lol. Mura found a packet of condoms and saw Kan doing that. Kan must have felt mortified while Mura was just oblivious to it all, haha
ReplyDeleteSo that’s what that was! Lol I thought it was drugs or something 😂
Delete